I'm sure most of you have heard of the "Last Train to Nowhere", a collection of railroad artifacts from the Council City & Solomon River RR that are rusting away on the tundra near Nome, Alaska.

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While researching for my forgotten short line project, I found quite a few construction photos from this line. This wasn't one of the railroads I was focusing on, but I hadn't seen these photos before and decided they were worth scanning. I figured they might be of interest to some of you here, as they show the beginning of a railroad whose end is very well documented in tourist photos.

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The CC&SRR was founded in 1902 and had its first delivery of rolling stock in 1903. The railroad got off to an inauspicious start, as the lightering scows went aground in rough weather and at least one locomotive fell into the surf.

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The company seems to have landed most of their supplies and equipment successfully, although a bit damp.

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The railroad's headquarters were at "Dickson", also known as Solomon, a camp at the outlet of the Solomon River. Like most of the Seward Peninsula's southern coast, this barely qualified as a sheltered small boat harbor, and had no good place for large ships to dock. Miners, equipment, livestock, and anything else coming ashore did so on scows and small boats, often with the same results as seen above. As with nearby Nome, frequent storms smashed any attempt at building a permanent wharf.

With long summer days the CC&SRR was able to work their men in 10-15 hour shifts. The company quickly constructed the start of a "permanent" dock, bridges, a bunkhouse, tent camp, office building, machine shop, water tower, and engine house.

Track laying went ahead slowly due to the marshy tundra and permafrost. Unlike some later Alaskan short lines, this was intended to be a permanent standard-gauge railroad built to high standards. Track was graded and ballasted. A third locomotive was brought to Dickson in 1904. Rails were initially laid for 10 miles the first year, but construction began to slow and the line was only 35 miles long by 1906.

By 1907 the company was deeply in debt, being unable to make a profit on the incomplete route. Backers claimed there were no engineering difficulties standing in the way of completing the line, only financing issues. On-site managers started selling off rail and materials to the nearby narrow-gauge Seward Peninsula Railroad, possibly to keep paying the work crews.

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Work seems to have ground to a halt in 1907, with the inevitable bickering, bankruptcy filings, petitions, and legal wrangling that often killed young Alaskan railroads. The buildings and equipment were mothballed and maintained for a number of years, likely with the hope that new financing or reorganization could save the project. However, a major storm in 1913 flooded the entire headquarters area and destroyed the docks and bridges, putting an end to the CC&SR.

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Damage to the railroad facilities after the 1913 storm:

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Eventually the buildings all burned, rotted, or were picked apart by locals for use as construction material (wood is a rare commodity on the Seward Peninsula).

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Today the locomotives, some cars, and various other rusting "stuff" can be found just off a public road that follows the former grade up the Solomon River.

Out-Bloody-Standing !!!! Thank you so very much for this series of posts, Mr saveitforparts !!!!

_________________At Your Service,
Sammy KIng

Les Beckman

Post subject: Re: Building the Last Train to Nowhere

Posted: Tue Jul 11, 2017 9:44 pm

Joined: Tue Aug 02, 2005 1:25 pmPosts: 5506

From the date of its construction start and the fact that the engines seem to be high drivered 0-4-4 Forney's, can we assume that they were ex-elevated railroad locomotives made surplus by electrification?

From the date of its construction start and the fact that the engines seem to be high drivered 0-4-4 Forney's, can we assume that they were ex-elevated railroad locomotives made surplus by electrification?

The late Keith Christensen was an expert on Alaskan railroads and at various times owned the Apollo from the Apollo mine on Unga Island, a Class A Climax from the Wild Goose Railroad near Nome, and an 0-4-0 from near Dawson City. He once told me that at least some of the trucks at this location had been built by Climax.

I have the same question. What was the goal? How long was the line supposed to reach? I was surprised to read about it reaching 35 miles. That's a long trip in a tiny Forney.

And rhetorically, why the hell did they build the terminal right on the beach?

The photos show way more of a railroad than I imagined from previous viewings of the derelict engines. I assumed that some solitary dreamer off-loaded them there, and went bust without building anything else. Fascinating.

_________________"It was not easy to convince Allnutt. All his shop training had given him a profound prejudice against inexact work, experimental work, hit-or-miss work."C. S. Forester

The goal was to make a fortune providing transpostation to the gold mines in the aria. By 1906 the Opher Creek mines had produced $4.5 millinon. Lets not forget the steam donkey that is also there. It was built by the Pioneer Iron Works at Olympia, Washington and is the only known serviving example of their product.

One has to remember that in this era, the railroad was still the telephone or automobile of the 20th century and the Internet of the 21st century. The railroad was how people and commerce got into the heartland and to the frontier (literally, in this case). If you found enough gold (or silver or copper or lumber trees or coal or the like), a railroad line shortly followed. If you lacked a rail line, you weren't going to flourish or even survive.

This is why the post-Civil War "railroad mania" came about, and why so many rail lines were built that, in all fairness, should never have been built, even before automobiles came about.

The Strasburg Rail Road itself is an early example of the "build a rail line to the main line that bypassed us before our town withers away" approach.

John T

Post subject: Re: Building the Last Train to Nowhere

Posted: Fri Jul 14, 2017 2:13 pm

Joined: Sun Sep 14, 2014 5:05 pmPosts: 782

According to Clifford in Alaska Yukon Railroads the CC&SR only built 7 miles of track at a cost of $1.2 million. Production of the mines peaked in 1905 and the railroad shut down in 1907.

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